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The Guide to Open Project Funding 2015-16 v2 April 2016 1
Creative Scotland
The Guide to Open Project Funding
What is the purpose of Open Project Funding?
Scotland‟s arts, screen and creative industries are a central part of life in Scotland.
Creative Scotland has the important responsibility to provide the right funding to
support ambition, and generate access to arts and creativity for as many people as
possible.
Open Project Funding offers support to individuals and organisations for projects
that help them explore, realise and develop their artistic and creative potential, and
enrich Scotland‟s reputation as a distinctive creative nation connected to the world.
We are looking to fund projects that will contribute to delivering our 10-year plan,
Unlocking Potential, Embracing Ambition.
This funding enables applicants to apply for a project that can include research,
development and delivery of a project in a single application, or individual strands
as needed by the project.
While this fund is focused on fixed-term projects, we are asking applicants to tell us
how their project fits in with their longer term ambitions so we can support artists,
creative people and organisations to develop a sustainable approach to their work.
We want to support work which will make a real difference to the quality of cultural
life in Scotland, benefiting people across the whole country. We also want to
encourage new imaginative ideas and inspiring ways of doing things that will impact
on other sectors and beyond Scotland.
‘We want Scotland to be a place where the arts, screen and creative
industries are valued and recognised, where artists and creative people
are flourishing and thriving, and where everyone, everywhere, is
interested and curious about creativity.’
-Taken from Unlocking Potential, Embracing Ambition, our 10-year plan for the arts,
screen and creative industries.
The Guide to Open Project Funding 2015-16 v2 April 2016 2
This guide gives you information about:
how Open Project Funding works
some of the types of activities it can support
the types of activities this fund does not support
who is - and who is not - eligible to apply for Open Project Funding
how to apply, and
how your application will be assessed.
Alongside this, we have produced separate guidance documents providing advice on
how to answer the questions in your application form if you are applying for up to
£15k and another separate guide if you are applying for over £15k. Please read
this guide and the associated Help With Your Application guidance document
carefully before you submit your application.
In addition, there are information sheets to provide additional guidance and clarity
on specific areas of the application (for example, budgets) or specific types of
activity (for example, touring applications). These can be accessed on the
Creative Scotland website. These will be updated regularly with additional sheets
added based on feedback from applicants or Creative Scotland staff.
Other Creative Scotland funding programmes:
The Open Project Fund is highly competitive. Alongside Open Project Funding,
Creative Scotland operates a small number of other funding opportunities through
our Targeted Funds which address specific activities and development needs in a
sector, specialism, and/or geographic area. You cannot apply to multiple Creative
Scotland funding programmes for the same project, so before making an
application to the Open Project Fund, you should check these other funds in case
one of them would be more appropriate for your project.
If, for example, your project involves music-making opportunities for young people,
then you should consider looking instead at the Youth Music Initiative. Or if you
are looking for film production and development funding, look at our Screen
Funding. A full list of all these funds can be found on the Creative Scotland
website.
If you require any help in identifying which fund is the most appropriate for your
needs, contact our Enquiries Service. You can do this by phone, email or through
our website. Call 0845 603 6000, email [email protected], or fill
out a form on our website here. Phone lines are open from 10-12 noon and 2-4
pm, Mon-Fri, with voicemail outwith these hours.
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What are we looking for in your application?
This section summarises what you need to tell us in your application and why we
are asking for it. Before you start your application you must read the relevant
Help With Your Application guide which provides more detail. To give yourself
the best chance of being awarded funding, your application should demonstrate
how your project meets the following key criteria.
1. Artistic and Creative Quality:
We are interested in the artistic or creative ideas in the project, who is involved and
how the project contributes to your development. Your application should include:
A clear explanation of your project‟s main artistic or creative idea
Your artistic and/or creative skills, experience and achievements
The contribution of partners to the project (if relevant) and their skills,
experience and achievements
How your project would contribute to your, or your organisation‟s, artistic or
creative development.
2. Reaching people:
Creative Scotland is a channel for public funding from both the Scottish
Government and the UK National Lottery and seeks to support activity which
benefits people and society as a whole. In your application, we would like you to
tell us who and how many people you plan to reach with your project, where they
are, what benefit they will receive and how you plan to reach them.
We want to ensure that our funded projects reach a wide range of people. We are
therefore interested in whether you are targeting people from different
backgrounds (such as by age, disability, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, or
socio-economic backgrounds) and why.
Some types of activity might not reach people immediately, for example research,
training or residencies which are more focussed on the development of the artist or
We will consider your application against the following four criteria:
1. Artistic and Creative Quality
2. Reaching People
3. Effective Project Management
4. Financial Management
The Guide to Open Project Funding 2015-16 v2 April 2016 4
the project activity. In these situations you should tell us about who you intend to
reach in the future and how this project will contribute to helping you do this.
3. Effective Project Management:
The final two criteria relate to explaining how you will manage your project,
demonstrating that you have a good understanding of the costs and income
involved and how they will be controlled. We want to fund well-managed projects
that deliver as planned. To enable us to consider your project, your application
should include:
• Timelines for the main phase(s) of the project
• Your skills, experience and track record of managing projects of this type,
scale and complexity
• How partnerships (if applicable) will be managed and how they will contribute
to the effective delivery of the project
The key areas of risk relating to project delivery and how you will reduce or
avoid them
How you will collect and incorporate feedback through the life of the project
How you will monitor and measure the success of your project.
4. Financial Management:
We ask that all applicants complete some basic standard information about income
and costs in the application form. Additionally, for those applying for over £15k
we also ask you to provide a separate budget for your project providing more detail
on the expected income and costs.
To help you with your budget planning, we have produced a specific Information
Sheet on Budgets which you can access on our website. This guide contains
information about what we‟re looking for from you, as well as examples budgets to
help you with your planning.
Based on the budget information you provide, we will consider the following:
Whether your costs are reasonable for a project of the scale and type you are
proposing
The certainty of income from other sources, if applicable, and the
reasonableness of the amounts
Your plans and the track-record of you and your team in managing the
finances of projects of this scale and type.
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What sorts of activity will Open Project Funding support?
Open Project Funding is not intended to support ongoing organisational running
costs, although some project administration costs (such as the staffing required to
deliver a project) may form part of your budget.
Open Project Funding is designed to accommodate the widest possible range of
activities for individuals and organisations. For example, but not exclusively:
Projects that develop artistic and creative practice and skills, such as
funding for:
the time to research, develop or create work or content including
artists‟ bursaries to support practice development
professional training or developmental activity, in the UK or internationally
artist residencies – either for organisations to host one, or individuals to
undertake one
organisation-led talent, skills and/or sectoral development
organisational development as part of the delivery of the project, including
activities to improve environmental sustainability or income generation.
Projects creating something new and of high quality, such as funding for:
the writing and publishing of books, poetry or plays
the commissioning of new work, including the curation, production, or
exhibition of new work in any art form, such as an exhibition of contemporary
visual art, or dance and theatrical performances
the recording and production of music
Open Project Funding will support an activity or a set of related
activities in the arts, screen and creative industries that take place
within a specified period of no more than 2 years in duration, with an
agreed start and end date, and specific objectives to be achieved in
that time.
Projects should benefit artists and creative people, and/or arts,
screen and creative organisations from Scotland by helping them to
sustain themselves and their work, to help them thrive, and to bring
benefit to the people in Scotland.
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artistic or creative projects that are based on the traditional arts of Scotland,
or which use the languages of Scotland, such as Gaelic and Scots
creative technology projects in any art form or medium.
Projects which either present work to audiences, or are seeking to
understand, develop and reach new audiences, such as funding for:
artistic or cultural events such as one-off performances, events or festivals,
touring or distribution
Scottish based artists to take up international opportunities such as
showcases or tours
public art
audience research that can be shared with other publicly funded projects
online or live streamed artistic or creative events.
Projects which encourage more people to get involved in artistic and
creative activity, such as funding for:
participatory projects, such as artists working with people in communities,
the care system, the justice system and education
activity which broadens - or removes barriers - to participation, reaches more
people and encourages more people to take part
Equalities, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) projects which specifically address
inequalities due to age, ethnicity, disability or other legislative Protected
Characteristics.
As part of these creative activities, as well as supporting the costs to
deliver the project, you can also seek funding for:
audience development
travel costs as part of artistic or creative research and development
marketing activities (as part of a larger project e.g. advertising a tour)
new equipment costs related to the delivery of the project. Organisations
can apply for an „equipment only‟ application, provided this equipment will
have a broader communal impact, and public benefit. Individuals cannot
apply for „equipment only‟ applications – but equipment can be included as
one element of the broader project costs.
creative learning activity
small-scale capital costs such as installing fixed assets (such as lighting or
seating), purchase of instruments, vehicles, or the installation of new
technologies. Building development projects can also be supported providing
the overall budget for the project does not exceed £200k.
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How many applications can I make at any one time?
If you wish to submit more than one application, we ask that you think carefully
about your priorities and plan for future activity well in advance of delivering it.
If your funding needs are relatively straightforward, then your application can be a
simple request for one thing – the costs to attend a residency or development
opportunity or support to produce a new piece of work – or it can cover a number
of strands of related developmental activity.
Alternatively, if you‟re working on wholly different projects with different partners,
you should consider whether you are better served by putting in separate
applications.
In all cases, having more than one application in for assessment does not
guarantee that one or both projects will be supported, and in order to be eligible to
apply (if you are in receipt of previous Open Project Funding and delivering a live
project) you will need to show that you are up-to-date with meeting the conditions
and project monitoring information required for any previous grant.
You can have two applications under assessment for Open Project
Funding at any one time.
The Guide to Open Project Funding 2015-16 v2 April 2016 8
What will Open Project Funding NOT support?
The guidance that follows is provided to help applicants understand some of the
types of activity that Open Project Funding cannot support. Please note that this
information is not definitive. Nor does it imply that any eligible project will
automatically be supported. As previously outlined, the Open Project Fund is
competitive and we receive more applications for funding than the budget can
support.
If you want to clarify if your project fits within our eligibility, or get some general
advice, please contact our Enquiries Service. You can do this by phone, email or
through our website.
Call 0845 603 6000, email [email protected], or fill out a form
on our website (phone lines are open from 10-12 noon and 2-4 pm, Mon-Fri, with
voicemail outwith these hours). Please note that we won‟t review draft applications.
Open Project Funding will not support the following:
Activities that are not related to the arts, screen or creative industries:
Creative Scotland is the public body responsible for supporting the arts, screen and
creative industries in Scotland – so your project will need to relate to our key areas
of responsibility which cover dance, music, literature, visual arts, theatre, screen,
media and the creative industries.
Activities which have already happened - or are scheduled to begin before
we reach a decision on your application:
If your core project activity has happened, or will start before we have reached a
decision - within 8 weeks if you‟re applying for under £15k, or within 12 weeks if
applying for over £15k - then your application will be ineligible. We encourage you
to plan for any activity well in advance of delivering it, but you shouldn‟t order, pay
for or contract any goods or services that you intend to include in your funding
application as this will make your application ineligible.
Large scale capital activity:
The Open Project Fund is not intended as a source of support for large scale capital
development projects - such as costs for major renovations or building projects.
This includes any pre-application development costs (such as feasibility studies).
We can accept applications for up to £100k towards a smaller capital or building
projects, provided the total costs (for the whole project) do not exceed £200k.
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Funding for formal education programmes, or activities which are solely
focussed on supporting current students:
Creative Scotland cannot support students for their studies, or for any funding
related to any full-time, long-term, formal or accredited programmes of education
in the UK or abroad (this includes both tuition fees and/or any living costs for the
student whilst on their course). The Scottish Government produces a guide to
funding for learning and training which can give an overview of the public
funding support for courses, education and training. Additionally if you are a current
full-time student you are not eligible to apply for funding for any artistic or creative
work (even if it is not related to your studies) until you have completed your
course. Similarly if you are a group or organisation applying for a project which
primarily worked with, or solely involved students (like a student society or student
drama group), then your project would not be eligible for our support. For more
information about students please read the guidance on our website.
Individuals looking for equipment-only funding:
Individuals cannot apply for „equipment-only‟ applications – but some new
equipment costs (no more than 50% of the overall budget) can be included as part
of the overall project costs. Organisations can make an „equipment-only‟
application, provided this equipment will have a broader communal impact and
public benefit (i.e. equipment that will benefit many people in a community facility
or instruments which can be used by groups of people). Please note that purchase
of second-hand equipment is not usually eligible.
Ongoing organisational running costs:
The Open Project Fund is aimed at supporting time-limited projects – in other
words activity which has a clear plan of what it is trying to do, with set objectives,
all happening within set start and finish dates. It won‟t support the broader ongoing
running costs of organisations or any overhead costs (such as rent, staff salaries or
equipment) that are not directly related to the project. If applying as an
organisation you need to make clear that any funding is only for time-limited
overheads relating to the delivery of the project (such as costs for project staff
time, venue hire, utilities etc.)
Translation costs
The Open Project Fund will support Scottish-based publishers with the costs of
translating work from other languages into English, Gaelic or Scots. For
international publishers seeking funding to translate existing work by Scottish
authors into other languages, we would direct you towards the Publishing
Scotland Translation Fund which has been set up specifically for this purpose.
The Guide to Open Project Funding 2015-16 v2 April 2016 10
Business start-up costs:
As with the ongoing running costs, the Open Project Fund also won‟t support
general business start-up costs. There is occasionally some funding available
through the enterprise agencies (Business Gateway, Scottish Enterprise,
Highlands and Islands Enterprise) although this funding is often targeted
towards specific industry sectors or geographic areas. It is also worth discussing
ideas for new business activity with the Cultural Enterprise Office (an
organisation supported with Creative Scotland funds to help deliver specific
business development support for the creative industries). Additionally, in early
2016, Creative Scotland will publish its first Creative Industries Strategy. This
will describe the aims, priorities and actions that will help ensure the continued
growth and impact of the creative industries across Scotland. Anyone working in a
creative business should be aware of this strategy.
Activities taking place in schools:
The Open Project Fund will not fund schools or parents groups for general arts
activity happening in schools. However we are supportive of high-quality, artist-led
projects that recognise the contribution of artists to learning in, about and through
the arts, screen and creative industries. These can include, for example, artists
working on creative learning projects which take place either in or out of school,
relate to lifelong learning activity, or which happen in a community and involve
working with schools. The application must come from the artist or arts
organisation and should add real value to the learning experience.
Activities or events organised by international groups, which mainly take
place outside Scotland and which don’t benefit the people and/or artistic
community of Scotland:
Open Project Funding should benefit the people of Scotland directly or indirectly.
Individuals and organisations based in Scotland can apply for international activity
provided that they are able to demonstrate the benefits it will bring to them and
their work, and how this will then feed back into future activity benefitting the
people of Scotland. Applicants from outside Scotland looking to undertake activity
which takes place outside Scotland will only be eligible to apply if the project is able
to demonstrate that it provides significant benefit to Scottish-based artists and/or
audiences.
Self-publishing:
Whilst writers can apply for funding to help them develop their writing or support
the time needed to create new work, the Open Project Fund will not support
authors looking for funding to self-publish their books. For publishing we will only
support recognised professional publishing houses which publish a range of authors
The Guide to Open Project Funding 2015-16 v2 April 2016 11
and titles each year, and then distribute these works via recognised channels (such
as online retailers and through bookshops).
Film/short film production and development costs
Alongside Open Project Funding, Creative Scotland has a range of specific funds to
support the film and screen sector. You can find more about these funds on the
Creative Scotland website. Because these funds already support the costs of film
development, production, distribution and exhibition we would not consider an
application for this activity from the Open Project Fund. Similarly, Creative
Scotland‟s support for short film is via the Scottish Film Talent Network which
we fund in partnership with the BFI NET.WORK - so short film funding is excluded
from support through the Open Project Fund. We only consider supporting film-
related projects via the Open Project Fund if the work is an artist film which is
intended for non-commercial exploitation.
Activities which would more appropriately be supported by another
Creative Scotland funding programme:
Alongside Open Project Funding, and the Screen Funds (outlined above) Creative
Scotland operates a small number of other funding opportunities which address
specific activities such as youth music (through the Youth Music Initiative).
Before making an application to the Open Project Fund, please speak to our
Enquiries Team, or check these funds in case one of them would be more
appropriate for your project. A full list of all these funds can be found on the
Creative Scotland website.
Activity which is seeking funding for more, or less, than the fund will
support:
The Open Project Fund will allow you to apply for support between £1k and £100k –
and in exceptional circumstances (and provided you have followed the appropriate
process and been given permission) up to £150k. You can‟t apply for more than
this in any single application. Additionally we don‟t accept small applications of less
than £1k and would encourage anyone seeking smaller amounts to look at the
range of smaller devolved funds which Creative Scotland has developed with a
range of partners.
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Who Can Apply?
Open Project Funding is available to individual artists and creative practitioners;
groups such as arts organisations, cultural agencies, creative businesses; and
organisations from other sectors which work with the arts and creativity. The list
below doesn‟t attempt to be definitive, but gives examples of the types of
individuals and organisations that are eligible for funding, but please check with our
Enquiries Service if in doubt.
INDIVIDUALS who CAN apply for funding:
Artists or Creative Practitioners
Individuals who are either based in Scotland or undertaking work in the arts, screen
and creative industries in Scotland. This includes, but is not restricted to, individual
artists and creative practitioners who are writers, musicians, crafts makers,
dancers, visual artists, producers, curators, digital artists or those working in film,
theatre, publishing or any of the creative industries. Applicants should be able to
demonstrate peer, public and critical endorsements, including the proposals for
assessing success of any trading activity, if applicable, in support of their
application.
Creative Groups or Artist Collaborations
Unconstituted creative groups such as bands, ensembles or any partnerships where
two or more people usually work together on projects as one collaborative unit, are
classed as a group of individuals for Open Project Funding. Additionally individuals
can apply jointly for funding, on an artistic collaboration for example, but one
applicant will have to take the lead and assume responsibility for managing the
application and any funding awarded.
This fund is open to individuals and organisations in the arts, screen
and creative industries.
Applicants should be able to demonstrate peer, public and critical
endorsements, including the proposals for assessing success of any
trading activity, if applicable, in support of their application.
We are looking for strong project proposals that demonstrate how the
project will help the applicant develop their practice as an individual
artist, creative practitioner or organisation and contribute to quality of
life for people in Scotland.
The Guide to Open Project Funding 2015-16 v2 April 2016 13
INDIVIDUALS who CANNOT apply for funding:
Students
Creative Scotland does not support current students for their studies, or for any
funding related to any full-time, long-term, formal or accredited programmes of
education in the UK or abroad (this includes both tuition fees and/or any living
costs for the student whilst on their course). Additionally if you are a current full-
time student you would not be able to apply for funding for any artistic or creative
work (whether or not it is related to your studies) until you have completed your
course. For more information, please read the guidance on our website.
Individuals working in sectors outside the arts, screen and creative
industries and seeking funding for non-artistic or non-creative activity
This includes sectors like tourism, sports, and the museums and heritage sector,
unless you can demonstrate that the project relates to an artistic or creative area
supported by Creative Scotland, and meets the main criteria for the fund.
Academics or other education professionals
Academics or other education professionals seeking funding related to their
educational role cannot apply.
ORGANISATIONS which CAN apply for funding:
You can apply for support if you‟re an organisation based in Scotland, and your
work or project is related to the arts, screen and creative industries. In the
application you‟ll be asked to tell us what type of organisation you are:
Company Limited by Guarantee
You must clearly demonstrate that the activity you are applying for is a self-
contained project in the arts, screen or creative industries, and the programme of
work is additional to your core business.
Company Limited by Shares
Organisations that share out profits to members or shareholders can only apply if
the activity they are applying for is a self-contained project in the arts, screen or
creative industries, and can clearly demonstrate that your project will promote
public benefit and will not be delivered for private or commercial gain.
Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation (SCIO)
The Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation is a legal form unique to Scottish
charities.
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Community Interest Company (CIC)
CICs must be registered at Companies House or The Office of the Scottish Charity
Regulator, as appropriate.
Local Authority
Local Authorities in Scotland who manage venues, deliver services or support those
working in the arts, screen or creative industries in Scotland. They must
demonstrate in their application that the funding they are applying for is additional
to, and not a substitution for, their own resources.
Cultural and Leisure Trust
Organisations that manage venues, deliver services or support those working in the
arts, screen or creative industries in Scotland. They must demonstrate in their
application that the funding they are applying for is additional to, and not a
substitution for, their own resources.
Other Public Sector Agency
Bodies working in other sectors such as health, education, leisure or tourism in
Scotland who are undertaking activity related to the arts, screen and creative
industries.
Trust or Foundation
Registered charities, trusts or foundations and other non-profit making
organisations in Scotland, undertaking activity related to the arts, screen and
creative industries.
Unincorporated Association
A simple constituted type of organisation, an „unincorporated association‟ is an
organisation set up through an agreement between a group of people who come
together for a reason other than to make a profit (e.g. a voluntary or community
group delivering a project).
Consortia, joint organisations or groups of organisations applying together
One of the organisations must take the lead and assume responsibility for
managing the application and any funding award made. Once we have made an
award, you cannot change the lead organisation to which the funding has been paid
without the prior written consent of Creative Scotland. All consortia that are
successful in applying for funding must provide a legally binding partnership
agreement.
The Guide to Open Project Funding 2015-16 v2 April 2016 15
ORGANISATIONS which CANNOT apply for funding:
Organisations in administration, receivership and liquidation
Organisations in administration, receivership or in liquidation cannot apply for Open
Project Funding.
REGULARLY FUNDED ORGANISATIONS:
Whereas Regular Funding is intended to support organisations to undertake an
agreed set of activities over a 3 year period, Open Project funding is the primary
route for individuals in Scotland and for funding organisations not in receipt of
Regular Funding. Our ongoing priority for Open Funding is therefore individuals and
organisations across the arts, screen and creative industries to help them explore,
realise and develop their creative potential.
Can a Regularly Funded Organisation (RFO) apply for Open Project
Funding?
Since its launch, Open Project funding has experienced a consistently high level of
demand for limited resources. We would not expect organisations in receipt of
regular funding to seek support from Open Project Funding except in very
exceptional circumstances. Any RFO which wishes to consider an application should
read the separate guidance and process which is available on our website.
The Guide to Open Project Funding 2015-16 v2 April 2016 16
How to apply for Open Project Funding
Alternative Formats, Languages and Access Support
Creative Scotland is committed to offering clear and accessible application
processes and programmes that are open to everyone. On request this information
is available in alternative formats including translations. We offer access support to
disabled applicants, tailored to individual requests. Support includes Sign Language
Interpreters for meetings and scribing support for dyslexic applicants. Officers can
offer advice to new applicants and support them to make an application. The
Equalities Team can offer additional one-to-one support to applicants with access
requirements. Please note we will accept applications and supporting materials
which are written in English, Gaelic or Scots.
If you have any general enquiries about the application process, Guidance or
Application Form, please contact our Enquiries Service:
Email: [email protected]
Telephone: 0845 603 6000 (10am-12pm & 2-4pm, Mon – Fri)
If you are a deaf BSL user, you can access our services with the Contact Scotland-
BSL programme. Go to www.contactscotland-bsl.org/public for more
information.
Submission dates:
Open Project Funding is a continuous programme, meaning that you can apply at
any time throughout the year.
We encourage all applicants to plan projects thoroughly. This approach will give you
time to properly develop, plan and market your project to give it the best chance of
success.
As part of our assessment (see section on Effective Project Management) we will
look at your planning and we strongly advise you to consider building in time
between receiving your decision and your project starting, in order to enable
funding contracts to be completed and for payment of the first instalment of the
grant to be made. We therefore recommend that your core project activity
should start no sooner than 4 weeks from the due date for you hearing
about the decision.
The Guide to Open Project Funding 2015-16 v2 April 2016 17
Making an application:
Before you make an application, you should read the associated Help With Your
Application guidance document – which gives advice on how you should fill out
the application form (there is separate guidance depending on whether you are
applying for up to £15k or over £15k). In addition, there are information sheets
to provide additional guidance and clarity on specific areas of the application (for
example, budgets) or specific types of activity (for example, touring). Please also
read these (which can be accessed on the Creative Scotland website) before
completing your application.
For applications up to £100k
Applications must be made on the appropriate Open Project Funding Application
Form, which can be found on the Creative Scotland website.
There are two separate application forms:
For projects requesting up to £15k
For projects requesting over £15k
Please ensure you use the appropriate application form. While both forms seek
similar information, applicants seeking over £15k are asked to provide a greater
level of detail and additional supporting material.
Completed application forms, along with all supporting material, should be
submitted by email to:
For projects requesting up to £15k, send applications to:
For projects requesting over £15k, send applications to:
The Guide to Open Project Funding 2015-16 v2 April 2016 18
For applications seeking over £100k, up to a maximum of £150k
As a preliminary step, you will need to submit a request to make an application
over £100k to Creative Scotland. Fill out the Over £100k Request Form, which is
available on the Creative Scotland website.
This request will be considered by a funding panel made up of Creative Scotland
staff, chaired by a senior Creative Scotland staff member, within 20 working days
of submission. We will notify you by email of the panel‟s decision within 5 working
days after the date on which the panel meets. If permission is given, you can then
submit a formal application using the Over £15k Application Form.
Please note that any permission to apply for over £100k that is granted does not
mean make any guarantee that the application will be ultimately successful. All
applications are assessed against the published criteria in the context of
competition with others.
The Guide to Open Project Funding 2015-16 v2 April 2016 19
Our Decision-Making Process
Assessment process:
Once you have submitted your application we will review it for completeness and
basic eligibility. If you do not meet the basic eligibility criteria for Open Project
Funding, your application will not be assessed. You will be notified of this, and of
the reasons why, by email. If you have not provided all of the information specified
in the appropriate Application Form, we will email you and you will be given 10
working days to address the issues otherwise your application will be ineligible.
For all complete and eligible applications, these will be assessed by Creative
Scotland officers with relevant expertise, using the criteria set out in the “What are
we looking for in an application to Open Project Funding section” of this Guide.
Assessments will be made on the basis of the information you provide in your
Application Form and any supporting materials submitted. We will only contact you
during the assessment process if we need clarification on any aspects of the
information you have already provided. We will not seek any new or additional
information. Please note it is still possible at this stage that an application can be
found to be ineligible. If this is the case, we will notify you of this decision, and the
reasons why, by email.
The assessor will review the application and consider the individual strengths of the
application against the criteria, assessing the artistic and creative quality, how it
will reach people, and the project and financial management from the information
provided. The assessor makes a recommendation on whether or not the project is
recommended for funding on its own individual merits.
All assessments and recommendations are then reviewed by a Panel made up of
Creative Scotland staff and chaired by a senior Creative Scotland staff member.
There are two separate Panels – one specifically for all under £15k applications,
and another for all over £15k applications. Feeding into these Panels, each
specialist team within Creative Scotland is invited to give an overview of their
strategic priorities for funding support from the applications under consideration.
The Panel, in reaching a final funding decision, considers the individual merits of a
project as summarised by the assessor, the strength of the application compared to
other applications of a similar nature, the strategic needs of each art form and in
The Guide to Open Project Funding 2015-16 v2 April 2016 20
respect of the other projects being considered by the Panel - all against a limited
budget.
Projects which are assessed as recommended for funding by an assessor can still be
unsuccessful when they go to the Panel, because of the volume of applications we
receive against the available budget.
Decision timescales:
For applications requesting up to £15k
Decisions will take up to 8 working weeks from the date we receive your
completed application form and supporting materials.
For applications requesting over £15k (up to £100k)
Decisions will take up to 12 working weeks from the date we receive your
completed application form and supporting materials.
For applications requesting over £100k, up to a maximum of £150k
You will need to seek prior approval from Creative Scotland before applying.
If approval is given, decisions will take up to 12 working weeks from the date
we receive your application form. Permission to apply does not guarantee
success of any application.
Please note that any application which is submitted and is considered to be
incomplete will need to have any issues resolved before it will be considered
complete and taken forward for assessment. In these cases, the 8 or 12 week
decision making timescale will only commence from the date when the
application is considered to be complete by Creative Scotland – and not the
date of the original submission.
We are not able to fast-track applications or assessments, so you must take
account of the time it takes us to reach decisions when you plan your project.
The Guide to Open Project Funding 2015-16 v2 April 2016 21
Once a decision is made:
Once we have reached a decision, we will contact you by email to let you know the
outcome of your application. If you are successful, we will send your Funding
Agreement by email, along with information that tells you what to do next.
At this point we‟ll also ask you for your banking details and detail any special
conditions of the award. You‟ll need to return a signed copy of the funding
agreement and any special conditions within 20 working days from the date of
issue, after which we‟ll release the first instalment of your grant. Payments are
normally made in two instalments – 75% at the start of the project, and 25% upon
successful completion and sign off of the appropriate project monitoring paperwork.
As with most funders, our budgets can only fund a proportion of the applications we
receive, and some projects are unsuccessful in their application, not due to any lack
of quality in the ideas or approach, but purely because of limited budgets and
extremely high levels of demand.
If your application is unsuccessful, we will contact you by email to let you know
why and offer you feedback. We will allow you to reapply one more time for the
same project, but will only accept a reapplication for the same project if the
reasons for it previously being unsuccessful have been addressed.
Additionally, because of the highly competitive nature of the fund, we can make no
guarantees that any reapplication will be successful even when any issues have
been addressed. Any reapplication cannot be fast-tracked and will be subject to the
same decision-making timescales as all other applications.
Complaints Procedure:
If you are not happy with the way we dealt with your application, you can access a
copy of our complaints procedure on our website here. Please note that you can
only complain if you believe we have not followed our published process when
dealing with your application. You cannot use the complaints procedure to appeal
against the decision.
The Guide to Open Project Funding 2015-16 v2 April 2016 22
Help, further advice or feedback:
If you require support, further information or have any general enquiries about the
application process please contact our Enquiries Service. Our Enquiries Service will
be able to advise you or will put you in contact with one of our officers.
You can contact our Enquiries Service by phone, email or through our website.
Call 0845 603 6000, email [email protected] or send us a
message through the website here.
(Please note that our Enquiries Line is open from 10am - 12 noon and 2-4 pm,
Mon-Fri, with voicemail outwith these hours).
We are committed to delivering the most efficient and effective service that we can.
Open Project Funding was launched in October 2014, and following a review 6
months after it was introduced, the fund was updated in November 2015 to
incorporate feedback, changes and clarifications around what it would support.
Going forward Creative Scotland will review the Open Project Fund guidance and
application material on a regular basis to improve the process and provide further
clarity as necessary. If you wish to feedback any comments, suggestions or
improvements relating to the fund please contact Enquiries in the first instance.
The Guide to Open Project Funding 2015-16 v2 April 2016 23
Notes and amendments:
This guidance (Version 2) was updated in April 2016.
From time to time, this guidance may need to be amended to update or clarify information about the
funding programme. In the interests of clarity and openness, we‟ll note any changes we make here,
and update the version number in the application footer.
1) In the section, „What will Open Project Funding not support?‟ on Page 10 of this guidance, we
amended the wording of the final sentence of the point relating to „Activities or events
organised by international groups‟. The wording was changed in response to feedback from
applicants. Previously „Applicants from outside Scotland looking to undertake activity which
takes place outside Scotland‟ were ineligible. In addition we removed the related note on this
issue from the „Organisations which cannot apply‟ section.